Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-20 Thread eliaz
On 1/17/2014 9:24 PM, nano wrote:
 On 18/01/2014 12:30 PM, eliaz wrote:
 On 1/15/2014 8:19 AM, nano wrote:
 On 15/01/2014 10:29 PM, Sebastian Urbach wrote:

 [...]



 I've been thinking for a while that a separate list for *bridge*
 operators might be a good idea. 
[snip]
 If other bridge operators also feel underserved and experienced users
 feel beleaguered by us, maybe opening a list for bridge operators (or an
 encrypted support address) might be a good experiment. Even if a
 dedicated list is populated only amateurs it might help us keep running
 more consistently  intelligently.
 Yup, my bridge is down for now. Understanding what I'm doing has
 taken too much time away from other work. I hope to have the bridge up 
 again as soon as I have enough time to work things out on my own or 
 frame intelligent questions. - eliaz
  gpg 04DEF82B
 
 I don't see any reason why bridge related topics shouldn't be posted to
 [tor-relays]; they are, after all, a relay.
[snip]
 I'd like to help you with your bridge problems; however, I don't run
 relays in graphical environments and don't use Vidalia. Have you
 considered launching a Tor cloud instance to run a bridge [*]? It is
 free (for 12 months on Amazon), simple to setup, and requires very
 little (if any) maintenance. If you decide you would like to run a
 bridge on Amazon and have any difficulties, I would be happy to help.
 You can email me off list if you prefer.
 
 [*] https://cloud.torproject.org/

I appreciate the offers, but until I catch up on my day job I won't be
able to take much advantage of them, and my delays in responding will
annoy both of us. And I want to first check out why switching between
tor versions in windows hasn't been working before asking questions
relevant to tor itself. I hope to be back soon. - eliaz



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Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-18 Thread mick
On Thu, 16 Jan 2014 00:19:13 +1100
nano nano...@bsdbox.co allegedly wrote:

 On 15/01/2014 10:29 PM, Sebastian Urbach wrote:
  Good Morning,
 
  I really tried very hard to stay calm but at least someone has to
  say it. I think operating relays / bridges can be described as a
  cutting edge job or experience.

[ deletia ]

  I expect a bit of resistance and a bit of a shitstorm right now.
  Please feel free to direct this straight to me and not to the list.
  I also would like a discussion regarding the facts of the matter to
  take place on this list very much.

No shitstorm yet.

nano says:

 Sebastian,
 
 I respect your opinion and appreciate your frustration borne from the 
 inabilities of less skilled correspondents and their submissions. 

[ deletia ]

 In the interest of full disclosure, I
 consider myself one of these new relay operators [0] so my opinions
 are most likely affected by bias.

We have all been noobs at something at some time. Personally I have
benefited immensely over the course of my life from the the knowledge
and experience of others who were generous enough to share with me. In
return, I like to think that others may be able to benefit from whatever
small ability I may have by sharing on /my/ experience.

I am a firm believer in the maxim that the only dumb question is the
one you didn't ask.

Best

Mick
-

 Mick Morgan
 gpg fingerprint: FC23 3338 F664 5E66 876B  72C0 0A1F E60B 5BAD D312
 http://baldric.net

-



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Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-18 Thread jason
Hello Fabiano,
You should try unsubscribing from the mailing list, I'm not certain M15
can help you with this though.
-J

On 01/18/2014 07:08 AM, Fabiano London wrote:
 Please! I am not participate in this forum anymore! Any e mail that coming 
 after this will be reported to Uk intelligence police (M15) 
 Be aware pls with all posts or e mails here !
 Have a nice weekend to all  
 

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Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-17 Thread Fabiano London
Please! I am not participate in this forum anymore! Any e mail that coming 
after this will be reported to Uk intelligence police (M15) 
Be aware pls with all posts or e mails here !
Have a nice weekend to all  

 On 18 Jan 2014, at 01:30, eliaz el...@riseup.net wrote:
 
 On 1/15/2014 8:19 AM, nano wrote:
 On 15/01/2014 10:29 PM, Sebastian Urbach wrote:
 I really tried very hard to stay calm but at least someone has to say
 it. I think operating relays / bridges can be described as a cutting
 edge job or experience.
 [snip]
 If you don't know what you are doing, then be honest to yourself and
 stop doing it !
 [snip]
 And further, i strongly disagree with the text Robert wrote today that
 the project should provide more material for newbies because there is
 already more than enough material.
 [snip]
 I would like to propose a new list which may or may not be called
 tor-relays-new or so. New operators should start there for a certain
 period of time and if everything seems to be in order they may be
 transferred to tor-relays.
 [snip]
 Sebastian,
 
 I respect your opinion and appreciate your frustration borne from the
 inabilities of less skilled correspondents and their submissions.
 However, I don't believe running a Tor node, of any kind, requires
 either it professionals with years and years of experience or serious
 skills in system administration.
 [snip]
 In part, I
 agree with the sentiment that [if] you don't know what you are doing,
 then be honest to yourself and stop doing it; however, I would instead
 change the apodosis to: 'seek assistance'. I would find that outcome
 preferable to ceasing participation entirely. Correspondingly, I
 consider this mailing list an excellent resource to facilitate said
 assistance; subscribers will either choose to contribute, or not.
 Furthermore, more documentation is rarely a bad idea and while limited
 resources should be prudently managed, I don't believe requests for
 assistance from mailing list correspondents consume said resources.
 [snip]
 Nevertheless, subscribers are free to acknowledge mailing list
 correspondence or ignore it
 [snip]
 In the interest of
 full disclosure, I consider myself one of these new relay operators
 [0] so my opinions are most likely affected by bias.
 
 [0]
 https://atlas.torproject.org/#details/799B025E25850A88CD133276301FAFB731C2EA94
 
 I've been thinking for a while that a separate list for *bridge*
 operators might be a good idea. I've put effort (and cash) into running
 a bridge approaching 24/7, at which I was successful with TBB ver 2, but
 have been frustrated since the advent of browser 3.5 and standalone
 vidalia. Running the bridge blindly - just loading 3.5 and not trying to
 assess whether the bridge is working properly,  or indeed if it's
 necessary, hasn't been satisfying. I want to know why/how certain things
 wok or don't work. I've been conflicted in this; either I run my own
 experiments, resulting in the bridge being up erratically; or I ask what
 I can well believe experienced node operators  developers might
 consider dunderheaded questions. And since bridges are supposed to be
 secret,  I'm not even sure what should or should not beasked  in a clear
 list. I've tried asking tor support via encrypted msgs with mixed
 results: I can understand that support has more important things to do
 than reassure me that I'm on the right track.
If other bridge operators also feel underserved and experienced users
 feel beleaguered by us, maybe opening a list for bridge operators (or an
 encrypted support address) might be a good experiment. Even if   a
 dedicated list is populated only amateurs it might help us keep running
 more consistently  intelligently.
Yup, my bridge is down for now. Understanding what I'm doing has taken
 too much time away from other work. I hope to have the bridge up again
 as soon as I have enough time to work things out on my own or frame
 intelligent questions. - eliaz
  gpg 04DEF82B
 
 ---
 This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus 
 protection is active.
 http://www.avast.com
 
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Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-15 Thread Sebastian Urbach

Good Morning,

I really tried very hard to stay calm but at least someone has to say it. I 
think operating relays / bridges can be described as a cutting edge job or 
experience.


It seems that everybody wants to be an node operator these days but sadly 
enough there is absolutely no test or qualification that proves that one 
has at least something like minimum admin skills or other capabilities to 
do the job. Anybody who wants to drive a car needs a license though.


Honestly, its great that it is getting a little bit easier to operate a tor 
node but when there are discussions over a period of days on how to adjust 
a VPS clock or basic lectures about udp / tcp ports, 100 % cpu load and so 
on then there is only so much to say:


If you don't know what you are doing, then be honest to yourself and stop 
doing it !


Neither is this mailing list nor the tor project in general the right place 
to make first steps as an admin. This project needs serious people with 
serious skills in this serious time which are capable to operate reliable, 
stable and when possible of course fast systems. There is a reason why most 
operators are it professionals with years and years of experience in 
operating different systems all over the world.


And further, i strongly disagree with the text Robert wrote today that the 
project should provide more material for newbies because there is already 
more than enough material. And if you feel that this is insufficient then 
thats just proving my point that you and others are way out of your depth 
and i seriously doubt that flooding the relay list with linux for dummies 
questions is helping the project with its limited personal and technical 
resources in any way.


I would like to propose a new list which may or may not be called 
tor-relays-new or so. New operators should start there for a certain 
period of time and if everything seems to be in order they may be 
transferred to tor-relays. Of course this is just a very rough proposal, 
there may should be other criteria involved, like uptime, received flags 
etc. Im sure that there could be a reasonable list of achievements for new 
relay operators.


I expect a bit of resistance and a bit of a shitstorm right now. Please 
feel free to direct this straight to me and not to the list. I also would 
like a discussion regarding the facts of the matter to take place on this 
list very much.


Keep in mind that i'm just the messenger and probably just saying out loud 
what a lot of people are thinking ...

--
Mit freundlichen GrĂ¼ssen / Sincerely yours

Sebastian Urbach


In time of war, the first casualty is
always truth.

Hiram Warren Johnson (1866-1945)
US Senator, California



Moritz and Jeroen,
Thank you both.

I tried both your ideas but the system is set to prevent the time being 
changed as you thought.
Another plea to the VPS controllers and it was corrected. So the lesson 
there is presume it is the VPS set-up first and foremost.


You both should know that the concise and clear advice like yours is what 
this list needs rather than mysterious jargon and code.
Anyone finding the instructions you gave would also see the complete 
explanation with them.


I don't know how but it would be good to facilitate the search for or 
extract such advice for keen newboys. The subject line isn't always the 
best label as I demonstrated.



Robert


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Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-15 Thread nano

On 15/01/2014 10:29 PM, Sebastian Urbach wrote:

Good Morning,

I really tried very hard to stay calm but at least someone has to say
it. I think operating relays / bridges can be described as a cutting
edge job or experience.

It seems that everybody wants to be an node operator these days but
sadly enough there is absolutely no test or qualification that proves
that one has at least something like minimum admin skills or other
capabilities to do the job. Anybody who wants to drive a car needs a
license though.

Honestly, its great that it is getting a little bit easier to operate a
tor node but when there are discussions over a period of days on how to
adjust a VPS clock or basic lectures about udp / tcp ports, 100 % cpu
load and so on then there is only so much to say:

If you don't know what you are doing, then be honest to yourself and
stop doing it !

Neither is this mailing list nor the tor project in general the right
place to make first steps as an admin. This project needs serious people
with serious skills in this serious time which are capable to operate
reliable, stable and when possible of course fast systems. There is a
reason why most operators are it professionals with years and years of
experience in operating different systems all over the world.

And further, i strongly disagree with the text Robert wrote today that
the project should provide more material for newbies because there is
already more than enough material. And if you feel that this is
insufficient then thats just proving my point that you and others are
way out of your depth and i seriously doubt that flooding the relay list
with linux for dummies questions is helping the project with its
limited personal and technical resources in any way.

I would like to propose a new list which may or may not be called
tor-relays-new or so. New operators should start there for a certain
period of time and if everything seems to be in order they may be
transferred to tor-relays. Of course this is just a very rough proposal,
there may should be other criteria involved, like uptime, received flags
etc. Im sure that there could be a reasonable list of achievements for
new relay operators.

I expect a bit of resistance and a bit of a shitstorm right now. Please
feel free to direct this straight to me and not to the list. I also
would like a discussion regarding the facts of the matter to take place
on this list very much.

Keep in mind that i'm just the messenger and probably just saying out
loud what a lot of people are thinking ...
--
Mit freundlichen GrĂ¼ssen / Sincerely yours

Sebastian Urbach


In time of war, the first casualty is
always truth.

Hiram Warren Johnson (1866-1945)
US Senator, California





Sebastian,

I respect your opinion and appreciate your frustration borne from the 
inabilities of less skilled correspondents and their submissions. 
However, I don't believe running a Tor node, of any kind, requires 
either it professionals with years and years of experience or serious 
skills in system administration. Similarly, I don't believe the 
designers of Tor consider such qualities prerequisites of Tor node 
operators but this is strictly my opinion -- I cannot, and do not 
intend, to speak for them. I believe that diversity (viz. amateurs) 
should not be vilified but should, in fact, be encouraged and supported. 
Further, if it seems that everybody wants to be an node operator these 
days, I consider this a positive trend and hope it continues. While I 
don't share your opinion that node operation can be described as a 
cutting edge job or experience, I do find the description suitable for 
Tor development; however, the two aren't equable and shouldn't be 
conflated. While code should be audited, I don't believe regulation 
should be applied to operators (except autoregulation) and don't really 
find node operation analogous with driving motor vehicles. In part, I 
agree with the sentiment that [if] you don't know what you are doing, 
then be honest to yourself and stop doing it; however, I would instead 
change the apodosis to: 'seek assistance'. I would find that outcome 
preferable to ceasing participation entirely. Correspondingly, I 
consider this mailing list an excellent resource to facilitate said 
assistance; subscribers will either choose to contribute, or not. 
Furthermore, more documentation is rarely a bad idea and while limited 
resources should be prudently managed, I don't believe requests for 
assistance from mailing list correspondents consume said resources. 
Nevertheless, subscribers are free to acknowledge mailing list 
correspondence or ignore it and, in my inexperienced opinion, 
[tor-relays] doesn't appear to be subjected to flooding. In regards to 
your proposal, frankly, I find it somewhat elitist and prefer to avoid 
'classism' where possible. I don't intend to dismiss your concerns or 
argue their validity, I just don't 

Re: [tor-relays] System Time

2014-01-14 Thread I
Moritz and Jeroen,
Thank you both.

I tried both your ideas but the system is set to prevent the time being changed 
as you thought.
Another plea to the VPS controllers and it was corrected. So the lesson there 
is presume it is the VPS set-up first and foremost.

You both should know that the concise and clear advice like yours is what this 
list needs rather than mysterious jargon and code.
Anyone finding the instructions you gave would also see the complete 
explanation with them.

I don't know how but it would be good to facilitate the search for or extract 
such advice for keen newboys. 
The subject line isn't always the best label as I demonstrated.


Robert


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